52 FACTS RELATING TO GROTON, MASSACHUSETTS. 



Memento [Cherub] Mori 



M? Abigail Kenrick 

 Widow of CapJ Caleb 

 Kenrick, left her 

 pleasant habitation 

 in Newton, & came to 

 her Daughier Dana's 

 in Groton, on accoun' 

 of y" civil War & Sep' 5. 

 1775. JE. 76. was remov- 

 ed by dysentery, to that 

 place where y*: wicked cea^^ 

 from troubling & y^ weary 



are at rest. 



Her maiden name was Bowen, and her daughter was mar- 

 ried to the Reverend Samuel Dana. 



The following epitaph is copied from a marble slab in the 

 Lawrence lot at the Cemetery. Mrs. Bigelow's death took 

 place in Groton at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Luther 

 Lawrence. ' Her husband, Colonel Bigelow, died on March 

 31, 1790, in Worcester, where there is a monument erected 

 to his memory on the Common. 



Here 



lie the mortal remains of 



Mrs. anna BIGELOW, 



relict of 



Col. Timothy Bigelow 



of Worcester, Mass. 



She died Aug. 2, 1809, 



^t. 6^ yrs. 



SONS OF THE REVOLUTION. 



Within a period of less than twenty years three persons 

 have died, whose fathers were natives of Groton and soldiers 

 during the American Revolution, namely: Andrew Johnson 

 Parker (youngest child of Joshua Parker), who died at 



